Mexican investigators find 166 skulls in clandestine burial pits
Officials won't reveal exact location of site for security reasons
Mexican investigators have found 166 skulls in clandestine mass burial pits in the Gulf coast state of Veracruz.
State prosecutor Jorge Winckler said Thursday that for security reasons he would not reveal the location of the site.
Winckler said the bodies were buried at least two years ago. He said investigator had found 114 ID cards in the field, which held about 32 burial pits.
It is one of the largest mass graves discovered so far in Mexico, where drug cartels frequently use such clandestine pits to dispose of their victims.
Investigators found clothes, personal possessions and parts of skeletons in the pits, but they focused on the skulls in counting, because each corresponds to one person.
Fiscalía localiza fosa clandestina con restos de al menos 166 personas <a href="https://t.co/Lip0WgRjOW">pic.twitter.com/Lip0WgRjOW</a>
—@FGE_Veracruz
Veracruz was the scene of bloody turf battles between the Zetas and Jalisco drug cartels, but the state also suffered waves of kidnappings and extortions.
Winckler said prosecutors found the field after a witness told them that "hundreds of bodies" were buried there.
Investigators used drones, probes and ground-penetrating radar to locate the pits and began digging about a month ago.
Winckler did not rule out finding more bodies.
Discovery gives hope to families of missing
Winckler said groups of relatives of missing people who perform their own searches for graves were not invited to participate in this one to maintain secrecy. He said they would be shown photos of items found at the site in a bid to help identify the remains.
Maria de Lourdes Rosales Calvo, who has been searching for her son Jonatten Celma Rosales since he was abducted with his girlfriend in July 2013, said the news of the newly discovered burial pits "gives hope."
"They await us in forensics next week to look at the belongings and IDs that were found," she said.
Todo el reconocimiento a mis compañeros peritos, fiscales y policías, 30 días de trabajos ininterrumpidos. <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/EquipoFGE?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#EquipoFGE</a>👊👊👊 <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Veracruz?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#Veracruz</a> <a href="https://t.co/5m5oCJdedb">pic.twitter.com/5m5oCJdedb</a>
—@AbogadoWinckler
She said authorities invited all of the state's collectives of families searching for missing loved ones, including hers known as the Veracruz Mothers Network, to come to the state capital of Xalapa.
Her son was 25 years old and working in foreign trade when four armed men abducted him and his girlfriend from their home six blocks from the mother's home. When she reported it, authorities told her that she had to wait 72 hours. Later, they brushed her aside, saying the couple had run off, she said.
Four days after they were taken, she received a call demanding ransom and was warned not to go to the authorities. She paid a fraction of it for five seconds on the phone with someone who might have been her son. It was only long enough to hear him say, "Mom," and then the line cut. She did not hear from them again.
Hundreds buried in Mexico
It was not the first time that someone with inside knowledge of mass graves revealed their location.
In 2016 and 2017, Veracruz investigators found 253 skulls and bodies in burial pits outside the state capital, after relatives of missing people said they received a hand-drawn map from someone detailing the location of the graves.
In 2011, police found 236 bodies in burial pits in the capital of northern Durango state, which is also named Durango.
A total of 193 corpses were found in the town of San Fernando in Tamaulipas state, just north of Veracruz. Officials say most of those were Mexican migrants heading to the United States who were kidnapped off buses and killed by the Zetas cartel.